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We are building jet engines: Baba Kalyani

cerberus

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Baba Kalyani, chairman and managing director of Bharat Forge, was visibly excited when Defence MinisterManohar Parrikar dropped in at his stall on Monday during the Make in India Week in Mumbai. On display was the Bharat 52, a long range artillery gun developed by the company. In an interview to Swaraj Baggonkar, he explains what Bharat Forge is doing in defence. Edited excerpts.

What are your plans for the defence business?

We are going in the direction that uses our core knowledge — material, material transformation, forging, machining, assembly, sub-systems. That’s where our expertise lies.

What are your investment plans?

We have a joint venture with SAAB for air defencesystems and a plant is coming up near Hyderabad.

What are your capabilities?

By building the artillery gun, we demonstrated our engineering capability. We are building jet engines — small ones, not as big as those by Rolls -Royce — for helicopters and unmanned aerial vehicles.

Is the jet engine indigenous?

The UAV engine we are doing indigenously. I have told my engineers in Pune that I want to see the engine in one year.

How much is your focus on the defence business?

Quite a lot. Take the gun programme, for instance. There are four programmes under procurement: the towed gun, conversion of the 130mm to 155mm, ultra-light howitzer, and the mounted gun. We are participating in all four programmes. I am sure we will win at least two.

Is the government moving as fast as companies would have liked?

Our defence minister is a very dynamic person. He is driving the ministry in the direction of the prime minister wants, which is indigenous capability.

Will Bharat Forge look for expertise outside India?

We are already in technical alliances. We have three joint ventures; we may go in for more. You can’t do everything yourself, it is not possible. There is involvement of electronics, radar and all kinds of things. We do not have that technology, at least not today. Anything to do with metal–forging, fabrication or machining–we can do. But, the idea is you make a product that is 95 per cent indigenous.

What will be the investment on all this?

Our strategy is to create building blocks for guns, air defence, aero engines and components. Artillery we can make entirely ourselves. As far as air defence systems are concerned, we are creating a hub in Hyderabad. In aero engines, we are making components for Rolls-Royce, Boeing and others.

We are building jet engines: Baba Kalyani | Business Standard Mobile Website
 
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what are your reasons though ? :D

He has big balls to enter this sector :D

Look at him with his artillery piece -

bharatforge-babakalyani505_021014044035.jpg


:sarcastic:
 
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Baba Kalyani can make it happen.. He is one of the few whose betting very big in our Defense sector with emphasis on MII plans..

If he is able to deliver on Jet engines even small ones he enables the first baby steps towards our MIC self sufficiency quest in a big way..

A good development
 
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We're almost 70 years too late! The Congress stifled private entrepreneurship and brought everything under government control especially in the defence sector due to misplaced security considerations.

But then as they say, it's never too late!
 
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Jet engines are an exclusive club more exclusive than the nuclear club and I really really want to see a 100+ kN turbofan engine in the next 10-15 years from one of our private companies.
 
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Jet engines are an exclusive club more exclusive than the nuclear club and I really really want to see a 100+ kN turbofan engine in the next 10-15 years from one of our private companies.


We desperately need it in half the stated time. We have an 84kn engine, we should not take no more than 7 years to come up with a 110kn engine.
 
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